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  • This significant film, pretty much withheld from circulation these days except in the odd eBay home-made DVD (how I saw it), has a mixed reputation. In those days of the late 1930s, there was much agitation about how to recover from the Great Depression and what changes society needed to make--and how drastic they should be---in order to avoid ever going through it again. It is thus one of the very, very few mainstream Hollywood movies to have an openly Communist character outspoken for what he is---an attacker of big capitalism which exploits the common working man. (He calls everyone "comrade" just to make sure you understand, but wears a very nice suit.)Yet the makers of the movie don't want him to be the hero, so they (slight spoiler here) have him involved in the blowing up of the factory of a nasty and selfish tycoon who wants to lower the wages at his factory. (The workers have tried to strike against him as a result but have been beaten up by hired thugs.)

    On the other hand, the filmmakers have a pretty good go at the millionaire who has big parties and is just selfish and politically manipulative. He is humbled and has to bow down, just as the Communist labor organizer has to. So who is left to root for? Just an old-fashioned all-American country lawyer who talks to a statue of Lincoln. This movie even has a character say, "we don't want the left, we don't want the right, we just want to go down the middle." In fact, this is a rather liberal movie of its day, tending to side with the progressive politics of President Roosevelt's New Deal. Ironically, though, it has been treated very harshly by some, but not all, historians (as opposed to movie fans and ciritics). At the time, labor leaders thought it was a right-wing conspiracy movie, because for practical reasons, they were at the time accepting the help and encouragement of Communists who who among the few to offer real assistance at a time when unionism was just beginning to obtain legal legitimacy. Anyone attacking the Communists was thus seen as attacking organized labor. (You have to remember that the so-called Popular Front of the late 30s united all well-meaning people, including both liberals and Communists, in the fight against Fascism, such as in Spain, and this included all good progressive causes in the US such as labor unionism.)

    Even now, there are leftist historians who think this movie is a little reactionary or at least anti-labor. In fact, it is just very moderate, or even slightly liberal in retrospect, justified with a kind of sickly-sweet patriotism that tries to substitute love of the flag for any political allegiance. It is almost forgivable in that respect, but its flaws were not invisible to sophisticated audiences at the time. The New York Times movie reviewer in 1939 made slight fun of the fact it was about just everything you could imagine a nice sweet story about modern America should be: "a strike, a strike-breaker, a Communist agitator, a tycoon, an Aunt Tillie, a girl, a boy, a leading citizen and several other things." Nonetheless, it is a fascinating look at how mainstream Hollywood---Paramount studios---tried to find a realistic, entertaining and relatively balanced look at the pressing issues of its day at a time when political divisions were sometimes very bitter.. Much of it is soap opera (including a very young, but good, Susan Hayward), but a great piece of movie and political history, and not a bad little watch.
  • Hearings for the HUAC, the first I believe, brought in the film critic for the Daily Worker, a Communist paper. Howard Rushmore worked for the Daily Worker from 1936 to 1939. He testified that the script for Our Leading Citizen was leaked to the US Communist Party leader, VJ Jerome. Jerome disliked the message and so Rushmore dutifully panned the film and called for a boycott. He said the Party convinced progressive columnists and front organizations to slam Paramount. You must wonder during that time how many scripts were shelved that did not pass the litmus test of being friendly or at least neutral in regards to Communism. We all know of the horrendous blacklisting in the late 1940s and 1950s. The blacklisting of writers unsympathetic to Communism in the 1930s is less known, but part of Hollywood history. It's ironic that Lawson and Trumbo were blocking non-party line writers in the 1930s. You wonder if they considered the 1950s their comeuppance for doing the same 15 years earlier to fellow struggling writers.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    When a small city becomes the victim of communist manipulators and organized criminal activity, it becomes the duty of the big hearted attorney Bob Burns to step up and spin this web of evil off of its axis. Once again, Gene Lockhart is cast as the pompous wealthy industrialist who will use whatever means necessary to control the town where he has built a plant and conned several people out of their properties. Young attorney Joseph Allen, the son of Burns' late partner, is back from New York, and has no interest in helping the "small people" like scammed old lady Elizabeth Patterson (dressed as if she was from fifty years before), going to work for the ruthless Lockhart. This upsets Burns' idealistic daughter, Susan Hayward, who had been looking forward to his return and finds Allen greatly changed. Paul Guilfoyle as the communist agitator and Charles Bickford as a crooked insider with criminal intent, stir up the populace in varying ways when Lockhart announces a wage cut, causing an explosion at the plant where one of the town's beloved citizens is killed. Lockhart utilizes the situation to his advantage to gain a foothold in an upcoming political race by using Allen, but Burns has his eye on the entire situation, pulling the strings in ways that change the course of the town's history, and his life.

    An amazingly fresh Capra like drama, this isn't as corny as it seems to be, and in fact is quite timely in many ways 80 years later. Burns, known for playing country bumpkin roles, is quite different here, living in a mansion, yet remaining one of the people. He'd turn his mansion into a shelter or hospital if he needed to, and because of that, is indeed the most beloved man in town, even if he's doing it simply because it's right. The cast is perfect, with Lockhart, Bickford and Guilfoyle outstanding villains and young Hayward, just on the brink of stardom, a sweet heroine, quite a switch from the usual nasty spoiled socialites she played quite a bit at the start of her career. The bright smiled Hattie Noel is a scene-stealing gem of a stereotypical black maid and lights up the room just by her presence in it. There's action, romance, danger, a great fight scene between Burns and Bickford and a perfect ending that will leave you cheering, reminding that in life, while the bad guys always seem to be on top for years, there is a reckoning day, and that gives hope that in dark times is much needed.